Almost 11 months have passed since public officials, political operatives and rabbis were rounded up by federal authorities in one of New Jersey’s largest corruption stings.

And so far, prosecutors are batting 1.000.

Here’s the scorecard: Of the 46 people charged, two have been convicted by juries and 18 have pleaded guilty. Twenty-five to go. (One defendant died.) A judge did throw out charges in two cases, but those defendants still face other counts.

No one has walked.

The latest to be sentenced was former Jersey City deputy mayor Leona Beldini, who was found guilty on two corruption counts and was sentenced Monday to three years in federal prison. Beldini met four times with FBI informant Solomon Dwek, who was posing as a developer, and she accepted $20,000 disguised as campaign contributions.

Attorney Brian Neary said his 75-year-old client would appeal because “campaign contributions are not bribes,” he said. “She took checks, not cash. She received nothing and promised nothing.”

Beldini, of course, has the right to appeal, but Neary knows bribery is accepting things of value to influence and reward official action — and cash, checks or a Kohl’s gift card would qualify.

Beldini was secretly recorded on audio and videotapes pledging her influence with Jersey City officials to help Dwek “cut through the red tape.” As judge Jose Linares said: “Any reasonable person listening to him would know he was a crook.”

Successful prosecutions send a message, and we hope Beldini’s sentence (the three-year stint plus two years of probation and $30,000 in fines) and the prison terms meted out to others (past and future) will frighten New Jersey officials looking for a payoff.

Sadly, there is reason to be pessimistic. As Michael Ward of the Newark FBI office said, each conviction is a “reminder of the pervasiveness of corruption.”